Parents learning to be present with intense adolescent feelings—anger, grief, despair—without trying to fix, diminish, or take responsibility for the emotion.
Rabia's spiritual tradition acknowledged the full spectrum of human emotion toward the Divine: rage, longing, despair, ecstasy. She did not bypass feeling but moved through it as the path to deeper union. Adolescent emotions are similarly intense and often frightening to parents: explosive anger, nihilistic despair, overwhelming shame. The parental impulse is to solve or suppress: "You shouldn't feel that way" or immediately fixing the external cause. Rabia's model suggests witnessing: "I see your fire. I can be present to it without needing to extinguish it." This is radically different from agreement or permission for destructive action—a teen's rage can be witnessed while harmful behavior is bounded. When teens feel truly witnessed in their emotional reality, the emotion itself often transforms; the intensity was often seeking recognition, not problem-solving. Parents who can sit with their teen's big feelings model emotional maturity and teach that feelings, even dark ones, are survivable and meaningful. This practice also protects the parent from fusion, where they take the teen's suffering as evidence of their own failure. The parent becomes a steady container, not a fellow victim.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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